590 U. S. p. R R. EXP. AND SURVEYS—ZOOLOGY—GENERAL REPORT. List of spedmens. Catal. No. Sex. Locality. When collected. Whence obtained. Orig. No. Length. Stretch of wings Wing. Remarks. 8365 3 Eio Grande, Tex... Oct. 2, 1855 A Schott . 8357 4052 9094 N. Leon, San Diego. IWftYim Mar. —, 1853 Lt. Couch M. Verreaux.... 118 29883 ILOO 14.25 4.75 Eyes dark brown; feet lead color. . PERISOREUS, Bonap. Perisoreus, Bonap. Saggio di una dist. met. 1831. Type 6orvus canadends 9 Dysornithia, Swainson, F. B. Am. II, 1831, 495. Same type. ' Ch.—Feathers lax and full, especially on the back, and of very dull colors, without any blue. Head without distinct crest. Bill very short; broader than high. Culmen scarcely half the length of the head ; straight to near the tip, then slightly curved ; gonys more curved than culmen. Bill notched at tip. Nostrils round, covered by bristly feathers. Tail about equal to the wings ; graduated. Tarsi rather short; but little longer than the middle toe. This genus includes the species of dullest colors among all of our jays. It has, too, the shortest bill, and with this feature bears a very strong resemblance in many respects to some of the titmice. The dates of the two names mentioned above are the same, but as Gray finds Perisoreus to possess actual priority I follow him in this, not having a copy of the " Saggio'' at hand. PERISOREUS CANADENSIS, Bonap. Canada Jay. Corvus canadensis, Linn. Syst, Nat, I, 1766, 158.—Forster, Phil. Trans. LXII, 1772, 382,—Wilson, Am. Orn. Ill, 1811, 33 ; pl. xxi.—Bon. Obs. 1824, No. 42.—Aud. Orn. Biog. II, 1834, 53 : V, 1839, 208 ; pl. 107. Garrulus canadensis, Bon, (Saggio, 1831.') Syn. 1828, 58.—Swainson, F.JBor. Am. II, 1831, 295.—Ndttall, Man. I, 1832, 232.—Aud. Syn. 1839, 155.—Ib. Birds Amer. IV, 1842, 121 ; pl, 234. Dysornithia canadensis, Swainson, F, Bor Am, II, 1831, Appendix, Perisoreus canadensis, Bon. List, 1838.—Ib. Conspectus, 1850, 375,—Cab, Mus, Hein, 1851, 219,—Newbekrt, Rep. P, R, R, Surv, VI, iv, 1857, 85, Garrulus fuscus, Vieillot, Nouv. Diet. XII, 1817, 479. Pica nvjihalis, Wagler, Syst. Av, 1827, Pica No, 14, Garrulus trachyrrhynchus, Swainson, P, Bor, Am. II, 1831, 296 ; pl. Iv. Young. " Coracias mexicanus, Temminck," Gray. Sp, Ch—Tail graduated ; lateral feathers about one inch shortest. Wings a little shorter than the tail. Head and neck and fore part of breast white. A plumbeous brown nuchal patch, becoming darker behind, from the middle of the crown to the back, from which it is separated by an interrupted whitish collar. Rest of upper parts ashy plumbeous ; the outer primaries margined, the secondaries, tertials, and tail feathers obscurely tipped with white. ^Beneath smoky gray,; Crissum whitish. Bill and feet black. Length, 10.70 ; wing, 5.75 ; tail, 6.00 ; tarsus, 1.40, Ha6.—Northern America into the northern parts of United States from Atlantic to Pacific ; more south in Rocky mountains. The young of this species are everywhere of a dull sooty brown, lighter on the middle of the belly, and mgre plumbeous on the wings and tail. With increasing age the region about the base of the bill whitens, and this color gradually extends backwards until the whole head, excepting the occiput and nape, is white. The under parts are sometimes whiter than in the typical specimens.